Low power capacitive touch detector

ABSTRACT

A low power capacitive detector is disclosed. The detector includes a mechanism to measure and detect touch on capacitive sensors. The detector uses signal processing to suppress noise and increase sensitivity. The detector does not require dedicated analog circuitry, making it easy to adopt in a microcontroller system. The detector can be scaled to a larger number of capacitive sensors without noticeable increase in silicon cost.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of and claims priority to U.S. application Ser. No. 13/233,589, entitled “Low Power Capacitive Touch Detector,” filed on Sep. 15, 2011, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.

TECHNICAL FIELD

This disclosure relates generally to electronics and more particularly to capacitive touch sensors.

BACKGROUND

Capacitive sensors increasingly replace mechanical buttons in consumer and handheld equipment. They are low cost and robust, as they require no mechanical components, and can sense the presence of a finger through a dielectric material, such as an encapsulation or glass. The capacitive sensors are usually detected by measuring the self-capacitance of the sensor, which will change up to a few percent when touched. If the detection is sensitive enough then proximity detection is also possible. Proximity detection allows detection of an approaching finger from a distance. This can be used to wake a device from a low power state before the application is physically touched. It is therefore particularly important to be able to detect proximity while using as little power as possible.

A disadvantage with capacitive sensors is that they have high impedance, making the sensors sensitive to electrical noise in the environment. The capacitance value can drift with environmental conditions, such as temperature and moisture. The challenge in capacitive sensing is producing an accurate capacitance measurement and distinguishing the signal from the noise and drift while consuming as little power as possible.

There are several conventional techniques in use to detect a change in self-capacitance of a capacitive sensor when touched or approached by a finger. One technique uses two I/O pins with a sensing capacitor between them. One of the input/output (I/O) pins is connected to the sensor. A switching sequence on each I/O driver pumps capacitance into the sensor capacitance until the I/O pin input threshold is reached. The drawback to this technique is that two I/O pins are needed, an external capacitor is needed and power is wasted by charging and discharging the sensor. In addition, noise rejection is limited.

Another technique uses an I/O pin to charge the sensor before sampling it with an analog-to-digital converter (ADC). The charge is shared between the sensor and a sample and hold (S/H) capacitor. The measurement is repeated with opposite charge on the sensor. This dual-slope measurement cancels low-frequency noise. However, there is no suppression of high frequency noise, apart from oversampling a large number of times, which is slow and requires power. In addition, the ADC must be used for sensing, limiting its use for other functions in an application. Only pins connected to the ADC input can be sensed, limiting the number of sensors in the system. Software is required for touch processing and detection.

In yet another technique, a microcontroller includes circuitry that can inject a fixed charge into the sensor capacitance and the S/H capacitor of the ADC. The resulting voltage on the ADC S/H capacitor can then be measured during conversion. This does not provide any noise rejection and software is required to process and detect touch.

In still another technique, the sensor pin is made to oscillate by charging it with a known current and comparing it to a fixed reference voltage. The resulting frequency is compared to a known frequency. The measurement sequence is long, and a large number of charge/discharge cycles are needed, resulting in wasted power. In addition, there is no noise rejection.

SUMMARY

A capacitive sensor is coupled between digital I/O pins of an integrated circuit (IC) package, such as a microcontroller. A parasitic capacitor of the capacitive sensor is charged through one of the digital I/O pins, and then discharged through an external resistor coupled between the digital I/O pins. A discharge of the parasitic capacitor is timed using a capacitance counter. The count value at the end of the discharge period reflects a resistor-capacitor (RC) time constant of an RC circuit formed by the parasitic capacitor and the external resistor. The raw count representing the sensor's self-capacitance can be filtered to remove low, medium and high frequency noise in the count, and then compared to one or more threshold values of one or more state detectors, the output(s) of which can be used to determine a touch event (e.g., physical touch, proximity touch, out-of-touch).

Particular implementations of a low power capacitive touch detector provide one or more of the following advantages. The detector allows capacitive touch detection with small and low cost external components. The detector can be used on any digital I/O pins in a microcontroller. The detector does not depend on an ADC. The detector suppresses noise in all frequency bands, providing increased sensitivity. The detector allows both touch and proximity detection.

The details of one or more disclosed implementations are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, aspects, and advantages will become apparent from the description, the drawings and the claims.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a simplified block diagram of an exemplary low power capacitive touch detector system coupled to a capacitive sensor.

FIG. 2 illustrates an exemplary differential capacitive sensor.

FIG. 3 is a flow diagram of an exemplary process for detecting capacitive touch.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION Exemplary Low Power Touch System

FIG. 1 is a simplified block diagram of an exemplary low power capacitive touch detection system coupled to a capacitive sensor. In some implementations, system 100 is part of an integrated circuit, such as a microcontroller or application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC). In the example, system 100 is integrated with drivers 126 a, 126 b and input buffer 128 in an IC package having digital I/O pins 122 a (“A”) and 122 b (“B”). System 100 can include control module 102, capacitance counter 104, idle tracker 106, median filter 108, averaging filter 110, threshold detectors 112 a, 112 b and state detectors 114 a and 114 b.

System 100 can be coupled to capacitive sensor 118 through digital I/O pins 122 a and 122 b. The self-capacitance of capacitive sensor 118 can be modeled as a parasitic capacitor 120 (“Cs”) between capacitive sensor 118 and “Earth” (free-space return). External resistor 124 (“R”) is coupled between pins 122 a and 122 b, which are coupled to digital I/O pads, preferably with slew-rate control to reduce electromagnetic interference (EMI). Drivers 126 a, 126 b and input buffer 128 are typically part of the I/O pad circuitry. I/O pad circuitry can also include protective circuitry (e.g., diodes).

Oscillator 101 (e.g., a high-frequency RC oscillator) provides a clock to capacitance counter 104. Oscillator 101 can be included in the IC package or external to the IC package. Real-time Clock 116 (RTC) is coupled to control module 102 and provides periodic event signals to control module 102. RTC 116 can be included in the IC package or external to the IC package.

Exemplary Acquisition

In some implementations, a capacitance acquisition starts by driver 126 a driving digital I/O pin 122 a and charging parasitic capacitor 120 to a first voltage level (e.g., Vdd). Driver 126 b then drives digital I/O pin 122 b to a second voltage level that is lower than the first voltage level, resulting in parasitic capacitor 120 discharging through resistor 124. During discharging, capacitance counter 104 counts the number of clock cycles that input buffer 128 reads as logic “0”. For example, a series of data read from input buffer 128 over 32 clock cycles can be 00000010000000000010111111111111. For this data series example, capacitance counter 104 counts “18” (the number of zeros in the data series). The resulting count value provided by capacitance counter 104 is proportional to the parasitic capacitance of capacitive sensor 118. The counting can continue for a fixed number of clock cycles. For example, if the maximum expected count value is 1024, capacitance counter 104 can count for 1024 clock cycles.

The sequence described above can be repeated, but with digital I/O pin 122 a driven to “0” and digital I/O pin 122 b driven to “1”. During the discharging, capacitance counter 104 counts the number of clock cycles that input buffer 128 reads as logic “1”. Using the example series of data above, the count would be “14”, which is the number of ones in the example data series.

The count values from the two measurements can then be added with the resulting value being a single measurement of capacitance. These “dual-slope” capacitance measurements performed in rapid succession cancel any low frequency noise, such as 50-60 Hz noise usually contributed by a main power supply.

The measured count value is proportional to the product of parasitic capacitance 120 and resistor 124 (RC time constant) and the frequency of oscillator 101. For a given application, resistor 124 can be a variable resistor that can be adjusted to give sufficient time (count value) for the signal to be measured. Typically, this count value is in the range of 100 counts for touch detection and 1000 counts for proximity detection.

Exemplary Signal Processing

Even if low frequency noise is rejected by the dual-slope measurement technique, medium and high frequency noise can also be picked up by capacitive sensor 118. High frequency noise is seen as a “white” uncorrelated noise added to the correct capacitance value. This additive noise can be removed by median filter 108. In some implementations, median filter 108 can be a median-3 filter and use memory 115 to store three consecutive count values to compute the median of those count values.

The output of median filter 108 is fed to averaging filter 110. In some implementations, averaging filter 110 can be a fast moving average filter, which suppresses medium-frequency noise in the acquired measurement.

Idle tracker 106 compensates for capacitance drift by feeding the output of median filter 108 to a slow moving average filter. Idle tracker 106 uses the output of median filter 108 to determine a baseline or “idle” capacitance value that is output by capacitive sensor 118 when untouched. Filters 108, 110 and 106 can be implemented in hardware, firmware, or software or some combination thereof. For low power applications, filters 108, 110 and 106 are preferably implemented in hardware.

In some implementations, an integer part of the “idle” value computed by idle tracker 106 is subtracted from the measured capacitance output from capacitance counter 104 by means of a saturating subtraction. Saturating subtraction limits the difference to a fixed range between a minimum and maximum value. If the result of the subtraction is greater than the maximum value, it is set to the maximum. If the result is below the minimum, value it is set to the minimum. Since the absolute value of this difference is much smaller than the measured capacitance output from capacitance counter 104, the number of bits needed for processing is reduced, resulting in reduced cost and power consumption.

This implementation has the further advantage that the average value of median filter 108 output is zero. The output of average filter 110 then represents the difference between the “idle” value and the measured capacitance output by capacitance counter 104. This allows a direct comparison against threshold 112 without subtracting the “idle” value first.

Exemplary Detection

One or more state detectors (e.g., state detectors 114 a, 114 b), perform detection by comparing the fast moving average output by averaging filter 110 to one or more thresholds (e.g., thresholds 112 a and 112 b). The one or more thresholds 112 can be defined by a user. Capacitive sensor 118 is “in detect” when the fast moving average exceeds threshold 112. In some implementations, an “in detect” condition produces an interrupt to a Central Processing Unit (CPU) or other device. In the example shown, two state detectors 114 a, 114 b and their corresponding thresholds 112 a, 112 b allow varying degrees of sensitivity for capacitive sensor 118. For example, threshold 112 a can be used to detect physical touch events and threshold 112 b can be used to detect proximity events. In some implementations, a threshold and detector can be used to detect long touches, which could cause idle tracker 106 to output negative values.

Optional Extensions Differential Sensor Support

The process described above describes sensing conventional self-capacitance sensors. One drawback of these sensors is that the signal is sensitive to the coupling of the sensor as well as the sensing circuit to Earth. This coupling can be small for handheld equipment, reducing the signal strength to the point that a touch is not detected.

To overcome this issue, it is possible to use a mutual capacitance sensor, which includes two sensor halves, where the capacitance changes according to the electric field between the sensors. The mutual capacitance does not depend on the coupling to Earth.

FIG. 2 illustrates an exemplary differential capacitive sensor. In some implementations, mutual capacitance sensors can be used instead of self-capacitance sensors, as shown in FIG. 2. In this case, each half of capacitive sensor 201 a, 201 b is connected to digital I/O pins 122 a, 122 b. The process described above is otherwise unchanged. The measured capacitance will be sensitive to changes in self-capacitance 202 a, 202 b and mutual capacitance 204. Capacitive sensor 201 thus provides a signal even in an application with poor Earth coupling, providing a more robust solution than a pure self-capacitance solution.

Sampled Operation

System 100 contains the control logic for starting oscillator 101, performing acquisition, signal processing and detection. System 100 can thus operate in a “sampled” manner, by which an ultra-low power RTC 116 (e.g., a 32 KHz real-time RTC) can produce periodic events, which activate system 100 periodically. The average power can then be determined by the time required to perform the measurement, the current consumption when active, and the interval between sampling periods. Since system 100 does not require any high power consumption analog circuits, and the signal processing allows even weak signals to be identified rapidly, the “on” time of system 100 is limited, saving power considerably compared to conventional.

Internal Discharge

It is possible to eliminate external resistor 124 by relying on pull-up and pull-down functions in I/O pads. The resistive value of the internal pull-up resistors of conventional I/O pads is relatively low when compared to external resistor 124, so the measured count value will be low. This can still be an option if only physical touch should be detected, and Earth coupling is good, providing a strong signal from capacitive sensor 118. A drawback of this method is that the signal value is small due to the rapid discharge caused by the low resistance value of the internal pull-ups resistors. This can be compensated by repeating the measurement cycle and accumulating multiple measurements to produce a single result to be processed by the digital filters.

Multiple Sensors

System 100 only relies on conventional I/O pads, so it can be extended to support multiple sensors at relatively little cost. Since the time it takes to measure and detect a sensor is much shorter than the sampling interval, it is possible to use the same logic to support multiple sensors. In this case, the sensors can be sequentially measured and detected, controlled by a sequencer. The sequencer can configure idle tracker 104, averaging filter 110, and state detectors 114 a, 114 b for each sensor before the measurement. After the measurement and detection, the new state of idle tracker 104 and averaging filter 110 can be stored, before progressing to the next sensor. A register bank or circular buffer in memory can be used to store the affected registers. The cost of this approach may be less than supporting multiple sensors by multiple independent instances of system 100.

Exemplary Process

FIG. 3 is a flow diagram of an exemplary process 300 for detecting capacitive touch. Process 300 can be implemented by system 100 of FIG. 1.

In some implementations, process 300 can begin by charging a sensor capacitor (302). For example, the capacitive sensor can be coupled to a first digital I/O pin of an IC package (e.g., a microcontroller). A driver of an digital I/O pad for the first digital I/O pin can be used to charge a parasitic capacitor of the capacitive sensor.

Process 300 can continue by enabling the sensor capacitor to discharge through a resistor (304). For example, the capacitive sensor can also be coupled to a second digital I/O pin of the IC package. A driver of an digital I/O pad for the second I/O pin can be used to drive voltage onto the second digital I/O pin, resulting in the charge on the parasitic capacitor discharging through an external resistor coupled between the I/O pins.

Process 300 can continue by timing the discharge of the sensor capacitor through the resistor (306). For example, an oscillator can be coupled to a capacitance counter to time the discharge of the parasitic capacitor through the external resistor. A count value at the end of the discharge period reflects the RC time constant of the RC circuit formed from the parasitic capacitor and the external resistor. The end of discharge period can be determined by examining an input buffer value for the first I/O pin and monitoring when it changes its logic value.

Process 300 can continue by detecting a touch event based on the time of discharge (308). For example, the raw capacitance measurement can be filtered to remove low, medium and high frequency noise, and then compared to one or more threshold values of one or more state detectors to determine the touch event (e.g., physical touch, proximity touch, out-of-touch). The one or more state detectors can provide an interrupt to a CPU or other device based on results of the comparison.

The disclosed implementations of a low power capacitive touch detector allow low cost, low power, high sensitivity robust capacitance measurements by a combination of several mechanisms. Instead of depending on dedicated analog circuitry, the disclosed implementations rely on integration with conventional microcontroller features, such as I/O pads, an RC oscillator and a real-time clock. Sensitivity can be selected by the user by tuning an external resistor. The implementations work with single-ended self-capacitance sensors and differential mutual-capacitance sensors, ensuring robustness even in poor earth coupling conditions. The implementations use effective acquisition and filtering techniques to remove low, medium, and high frequency noise, as well as capacitance drift. Due to the efficient noise rejection, the capacitive sensor does not need to be charged and discharged many times, which saves a significant amount of power compared to traditional techniques. The implementations can be self-controlled, allowing it to work in sampled operation, only consuming power during the actual measurement and signal processing. The implementations work without software interaction, making it suitable to process touch detection and wake the CPU. This makes it ideal for use in low-power modes, unlike software-dependent algorithms. The implementations can easily be scaled to a high number of sensors by dynamic reconfiguration and sequential operation of the invention.

While this document contains many specific implementation details, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope what may be claimed, but rather as descriptions of features that may be specific to particular embodiments. Certain features that are described in this specification in the context of separate embodiments can also be implemented in combination in a single embodiment. Conversely, various features that are described in the context of a single embodiment can also be implemented in multiple embodiments separately or in any suitable sub combination. Moreover, although features may be described above as acting in certain combinations and even initially claimed as such, one or more features from a claimed combination can, in some cases, be excised from the combination, and the claimed combination may be directed to a sub combination or variation of a sub combination. 

What is claimed is:
 1. (canceled)
 2. A capacitive touch detection system of a microcontroller, the capacitive touch detection system comprising: a counter module configured to detect an input signal, count a number of occurrences that the input signal has a certain value during a time period, and generate a raw count signal having a raw count value based on the number of occurrences; a filtering system coupled to the counter module, the filtering system configured to remove noise from the raw count signal and to generate a processed count signal having a processed count value; and a first state detector coupled to the filtering system, the first state detector configured to perform a first comparison of the processed count value against a first threshold value and generate a first output signal based on the first comparison.
 3. The system of claim 1, further comprising a second state detector coupled to the filtering system, the second state detector configured to perform a second comparison of the processed count value to a second threshold value to generate a second output signal based on the second comparison, wherein the first output signal and the second output signal are microcontroller interrupt signals.
 4. The system of claim 1, wherein the filtering system comprises: a median filter configured to generate a median filter output signal; and an averaging filter coupled to the median filter, the averaging filter configured to filter the median filter output signal and generate the processed count signal.
 5. The system of claim 1, wherein the filtering system comprises: a median filter configured to generate a median filter output signal; and an averaging filter coupled to the median filter, the averaging filter configured to filter the median filter output signal and generate an idle signal having idle value; wherein the system is configured to reduce the raw count value by the idle value.
 6. The system of claim 5, further comprising: a first sensor; a second sensor; and a sequencer configured to: sequentially select the first sensor and then the second sensor to provide the input signal; and store a copy of the idle value in a memory unit.
 7. The system of claim 1, wherein the filtering system comprises: a median-3 filter configured to generate a median filter output signal based on three consecutive raw count values; a memory unit configured to store the three consecutive raw count values; a first moving average filter coupled to the median-3 filter, the first moving average filter configured to filter the median filter output signal and produce the processed count signal; and a second moving average filter, slower than the first moving average filter, coupled to the median-3 filter, the second moving average filter configured to filter the median filter output signal and generate an idle signal having an idle value; wherein the system is configured to reduce the raw count value by the idle value.
 8. The system of claim 1, further comprising a control module; wherein the control module is coupled to a capacitive sensing system and to an oscillator; wherein the oscillator is configured to provide a clock signal to the counter module in response to receiving a start signal from the control module; and wherein the control module is configured to provide a charge control signal to charge and discharge the capacitance detection system.
 9. The system of claim 8, wherein the control module is coupled to a real time clock (RTC); wherein the real time clock is configured to provide a periodic signal to the control module once during a time interval longer than the time period; and wherein the control module is configured to send the charge control signal and start signal in response to the periodic signal.
 10. The system of claim 8, wherein the capacitance sensing system comprises: a first capacitive sensor; a first digital input/output (I/O) pin coupled to the first capacitive sensor through a first digital I/O pad; a second digital I/O pin coupled to the first capacitive sensor through a second digital I/O pad; and a first input buffer coupled to the first digital I/O pad, the first input buffer configured to provide a first buffered signal.
 11. The system of claim 10, further comprising: a variable resistor coupled between the first I/O pad and the second I/O pad; and a second capacitive sensor coupled to the second digital I/O pad, the second capacitive sensor configured to create a mutual capacitance between the first capacitive sensor and the second capacitive sensor.
 12. A method for detecting a capacitive touch input, the method comprising: counting a number of occurrences that an input signal has a certain value during a time period; generating a raw count signal having a raw count value proportional to the number of occurrences; filtering the raw count signal to remove noise and to generate a processed count signal having a processed count value; and comparing the processed count value against a first threshold value to generate a first output signal.
 13. The method of claim 12, further comprising comparing the processed count value against a second threshold value to generate a second output signal, wherein the first output signal and the second output signal are microcontroller interrupt signals.
 14. The method of claim 12, wherein filtering the raw count signal comprises: filtering the raw count signal with a median filter to generate a median filter output signal; and filtering the median filter output signal with an averaging filter to generate the processed count signal.
 15. The method of claim 12, wherein filtering the raw count signal comprises: reducing the raw count value by an idle value; filtering the raw count signal with a median filter to generate a median filter output signal; and filtering the median filter output signal with an averaging filter to generate an idle signal having the idle value.
 16. The method of claim 15, further comprising selecting a first sensor to provide the input signal, then selecting a second sensor to provide the input signal, wherein the idle value is stored in a memory unit.
 17. The method of claim 12, further comprising: reducing the raw count value by an idle value; filtering the raw count signal with a median-3 filter to generate a median filter output signal based on three consecutive raw values in a memory unit; storing the raw count value in the memory unit; filtering the median filter output signal with a first averaging filter to generate the processed count signal; and filtering the median filter output signal with a slower moving averaging filter to generate an idle signal having the idle value.
 18. The method of claim 12, further comprising: sending, from a real time clock (RTC), a periodic signal to a control module once during a time interval longer than the time period; sending, from a control module and in response to receiving the periodic signal, a start signal to an oscillator; generating, from the oscillator and in response to receiving the start signal, a clock signal that controls a rate at which the number of occurrences is counted.
 19. The method of claim 12, further comprising: charging a capacitance sensor by driving a first voltage onto a first digital input/output (I/O) pin coupled to a capacitance sensor; and discharging the capacitance sensor during the time period by driving a second voltage onto a second digital I/O pin coupled to the sensor to discharge the capacitance sensor, wherein the second voltage is lower than the first voltage.
 20. The claim of method 19, further comprising: recharging the capacitance sensor by driving a third voltage onto the second digital I/O pin; and re-discharging the capacitance sensor during a second time period by driving a fourth voltage onto the first digital I/O pin; wherein the fourth voltage is lower than the third voltage; and wherein counting the number of occurrences further comprises adding the amount of times that the input signal has a second value during the second time period.
 21. The claim of method 19, further comprising adjusting a variable resistor coupled between the first and digital I/O pins to change the number of occurrences counted during the time period. 